Developer Offers Beachfront Home
for a Fraction of the Cost
By Laura Layden
Naples Daily News - March 18, 2007
So what if you're not a millionaire.
You can still live like one in Southwest
Florida. You can buy a Gulf-front mansion on Bonita
Beach, for a fraction of the price.
Make that fraction: 1/10.
Longtime builder and Bonita Springs
resident Jeff King has started a new venture selling
vacation homes by the slice. He calls his business
Fractional-Homes LLC and his first three-story estate
on Bonita Beach "Casa Playa."
He puts the home's value at $5 million.
But you can buy a one-tenth share of it for $498,000.
That gives the owner the right to live in the home
at least five weeks out of the year.
One share of that is gone.
King and his wife will keep one share
of the home, which they built for themselves six years
ago.
"There are people that can afford
it, but may elect to do this because they don't have
to invest as much," King said. "It does
open it up to people who want to say they own a beach
house, and they get it at a fraction of the cost."
The Kings own another home on the
east coast, and want to make their estate here a vacation
home.
The four-bedroom, 5-1/2-bathroom home
offers 4,400 square feet under air. Total square footage
is 7,100, which includes an elevated "infinity"
pool that appears to reach into the Gulf of Mexico.
The list of special features includes
a wet bar, an in-law suite with a kitchenette, an
elevator, a wine cellar and a three-car garage. It's
decorated with high-end furnishings and before owners
arrive a service will personalize the home with family
photos and other warm, homey accents.
Since King started marketing the estate,
he's seen quite a bit of interest. At times, beachgoers
have lined up to pick up an information sheet on the
project in a box behind the home.
"I know that owning a single-family
residence won't be for everyone," King said.
"We are talking about all the people in the world
and there are only 9 people in this particular project
that are going to get this opportunity."
Fractional ownership has worked for
private jets, yachts and luxury resort clubs, developed
by the likes of Ritz-Carlton and Four Seasons. So
why not offer an exclusive home in a prime location?
The idea is spreading.
"It is just getting off the ground,"
said Dick Ragatz, president of Ragatz Associates in
Oregon, a consulting and research company.
Last week, the company hosted a national
conference on the fractional interest real estate
industry. Of the 525 people who attended, six were
starting to sell shares in individual homes, Ragatz
said.
It's an idea, he said, that makes
a lot of sense.
Research shows buyers of vacation
homes, or second homes, only use them a few weeks
out of the year.
"It's a stupid thing to buy a
$5 million home and let it sit empty three quarters
of the year," he said.
With fractional ownership, buyers
purchase the amount of time they "have vacations
to use, and discretionary income to spend on,"
Ragatz said.
"Typically, you get more services
than you would if you bought a home by yourself,"
he said.
King has started a property management
company to maintain Casa Playa for owners. A concierge
service can stock the refrigerator full of groceries,
rent a limo, hire a personal chef and arrange tee
times.
A private jet service has shown interest
in partnering with the new company, King said.
"It's just encouraging that we
are getting that recognition," he said. "I
don't know what that means yet."
The home service comes at a cost.
Owners will pay $12,700 annually to cover maintenance
and operating costs, including insurance and property
taxes. The concierge service isn't included, and the
cost for it is based on the services requested.
King plans to add more homes to his
offerings and expects to partner with an international
exchange program that will allow owners in his projects
to trade their time and spend it at other luxury homes
around the world.
He's got his eyes on other estates
on Bonita Beach and in Key Largo that may be converted
to fractionals. He wants to add at least two a year
to his offerings.
"We've got to find the right
properties," King said.
In a recent survey, Ragatz identified
254 fractional interest projects and private residence
clubs. Of those developments, 135 are in active sales
and 75 percent of them are in the United States. On
average, the developments have 40 units, which can
include everything from townhomes and villas to single-family
homes.
Twenty-seven percent of the developments
are concentrated in three states - Colorado, California
and Florida, according to Ragatz.
Total sales in 2006 in the shared-ownership resort
industry is estimated at $2.1 billion.
Prices range widely in the industry.
For private residence clubs, the average cost per
share is $247,700.
The share price offered by King is
definitely at the upper end, Ragatz said.
"There's not too much being sold at that price
level," he said.
Many of the fractional real estate
projects are in ski areas.
In Florida, one of the most visible
projects is the Ritz-Carlton
Club in Jupiter, where members get
35 days of luxury living in two- and four-bedroom
homes and access to the hotel's golf course and clubhouse.
Joel Greene, president of Condo Hotel
Center, headquartered in North Miami, isn't too confident
about the market for single-family homes.
"It just raises too many questions,"
he said.
His company specializes in the sale
of condo hotels and fractional developments worldwide.
The Ritz-Carlton offers many amenities
to buyers, from swimming pools and golf courses to
tennis courts and spas. They offer a 24-hour concierge
service, and Greene believes it would be impossible
to get the same white glove, five-star hotel service
at a single-family home. With the personalized service,
staff can do everything from unpacking and cleaning
your clothes, to making your dinner reservations and
buying theater tickets.
Greene called King's idea "enterprising."
"Fractionals
in general are certainly a growing trend," he
said. "They started out in the western part of
the United States, but they have been rapidly moving
eastward. They are no longer something that people
know nothing about."
Not everyone wants the resort atmosphere
that larger fractional developments offer, King said.
Some would prefer the exclusivity
of a single-family home, and to not sit "with
Billy Bob in the hot tub," he said.
"You really have your own clubhouse
here," he said of Casa Playa. "You've got
your own pool and spa, media room and entertainment
area."
And steps away, owners can find parasailing,
jet skis, bikes and tennis courts. Golf is a short
drive away.
He said fractional developments can
charge as much as $420,000 a year to cover maintenance
and operating costs. With his property, owners pay
less than $13,000.
One of the questions King gets most
often is how what he's offering differs from a timeshare.
What you get with fractional ownership
is more time, more flexibility to use the time and
a deeded interest in the home, he said.
He's designed a plan to dissolve the
fractional ownership in 10 years. That way the home
can be sold the usual way and the owners can get money
back - or even make money if the property appreciates.
The only way the home would not automatically
convert is if a super majority, or owners representing
eight shares, agreed to keep it as a fractional.
"It's a great exit strategy,"
King said. "I wish I could patent the idea. But
I can't."
|